White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Tuesday that there is no comparison between the deaths of four U.S. soldiers in Niger earlier this month and the 2012 deaths of four Americans in Benghazi, Libya.

Democrat Rep. Frederica Wilson of Florida has freely made such comparisons amid her criticisms of President Donald Trump. Wilson began attacking Trump over comments he denied making in a condolence call to one American killed in the ambush, and has since escalated that to denounce all American involvement in Niger.

“This could turn out to be another Benghazi, and I have asked for an investigation,” she said recently, according to the Washington Examiner.

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The U.S. ramped up its troop presence in Niger in 2013 under the Obama administration. Troops in Niger operate under orders to avoid combat situations. The four Americans killed earlier this month were the first American combat deaths in the African nation.

Sanders, speaking on Fox & Friends, said the Niger ambush has nothing in common with the attack on the diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya.

“These are not comparable events. I know that the Democrats want to make this a big, negative attack piece against this president. Look, this is still an active investigation. We’re still under review,” Sanders said.

“I think General Dunford did an incredible job yesterday kinda laying out the facts of what we know at this point, but to try to compare the two is simply just a cheap attempt by the Democrats to try taint this president,” she added.

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On Monday, Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff, sought to explain what the Pentagon knew and did not know. Among the major questions: whether the mission deviated form its plan at any point, why one soldier was found at a distance from the rest of his unit and why no call for support was made for an hour.

William Wright, the brother of Green Beret Staff Sgt. Dustin Wright, who was killed in Niger, said there is nothing comparable between what was a reconnaissance mission in a hostile territory and a well-planned terrorist attack on U.S. diplomats.

“I for one having experience in these situations — I don’t see it as a Benghazi situation. That was very different, where Americans were denied support by Americans. And it was highly controversial. And that was not war. It was a diplomat and his staff,” Wright told CNN on Monday.

“This was a special operations detachment doing a mission that they were tasked to do and in a very hostile environment,” he said.

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Sanders said the military will have the answers that the American people need.

“I think that once we have more information and the full review is complete, then I think that you’ll have a lot of those details,” she said.

“As Gen. Dunford said, the big priority is making sure that we get the information to the families who lost someone in this mission. And that’s certainly our responsibility, and certainly the priority that the Department of Defense and Gen. Dunford and Gen. Mattis have both laid out.”